Of all the numbers Aaron Rodgers has put up this season, none excites the Giants defense more than the 32 sacks that have been inflicted on the Green Bay quarterback.

That’s the most against any QB in the NFL, and a stat that whets the appetite of Giants pass rushers Osi Umenyiora, Justin Tuck and Jason Pierre-Paul.

Umenyiora points to several reasons why Rodgers has been thrown to turf five more times than any other QB in the league.

“They don’t have some of the weapons they had last year. They try to run a little more this year and some of the offensive linemen they had last year are missing,” Umenyiora said the other day as he tried to analyze the quarterback who will be the main focus of the Giants defense tonight when the last two Super Bowl champs meet at MetLife Stadium.

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Rodgers brings the 7-3 Packers to the Meadowlands on a 5-game win streak. That’s half as long as the streak they were riding a year ago when they arrived in Week 12 at 10-0 and left still unbeaten after Rodgers drove them 68 yards in five plays in 58 seconds to set the table for Mason Crosby to kick a winning 31-yard field goal.

It was Big Blue’s fourth straight loss as it fell to 6-6 with four weeks left. No one in Giants camp was thinking Super Bowl then. Most knew they’d be lucky just to make the playoffs.

Three wins in their last four games got them there, and in Round 2 of the NFC playoffs went to Green Bay for what most expected would be a much easier win for the 15-1 Packers, the favorite to repeat as Super Bowl champs.

League MVP Rodgers never got them a playoff win in 2011 because the G-Men got their revenge the best way possible — a 37-20 blowout win in which the Packers’ QB got sacked four times — twice by Umenyiora.

With Rodgers’sack numbers soaring this season - he’s been dropped 12 times, intercepted three times and fumbled three times in Green Bay’s five-game run.

The Giants are divided on whether Rodgers can be rattled and made to give up sacks, fumbles or INTs.

“I think we can probably speed him up a little. Maybe slow him down a little bit,” says defensive captain Justin Tuck. “Rattle him? Nah.

“He’s played in a lot of big-time games and played well in a lot of big-time games. He’s gotten hit a lot and come out and take your heart at the end of the game. So rattle him? I don’t think so.

“I hope I’m wrong, I hope we can. But he hasn’t shown anything on film where you think he’d been rattled. I don’t think he’s rattleable, if that’s a word,” Tuck said, laughing.

It may not be a true description of what the Giants did to Rodgers last Dec. 4 and what they accomplished six weeks later, but it still got the necessary result.

So, can the G-Men duplicate that today?

“Some of the teams they’ve played against have been good rush teams, and he’s not forcing it,” claims Umenyiora. “He doesn’t want to throw interceptions so sometimes he will take a sack.

“So for us we just want to get pressure and see if we can get our hands up whenever they go to that three-step drop because that’s what we’re expecting.”

“That’s what you go into the game thinking,” Tuck says. “I’ve played this guy a lot, know him personally, know his demeanor. We’ve had success against him and kind of sped some of his reads up, and slowed him down in his progression because of some different looks.

“But as far as being rattled? I haven’t seen it yet. I hope I’m wrong, I hope we get the opportunity to rattle him Sunday (today).”

With a chance to rebuild their NFC East lead to 2.5 games with five to play, that may be too much to ask.